by mistered4805 »
Sat Sep 05, 2015 3:56 pm
...About the pulse forming cap. You're right on the mark, it is 35 working volts instead of 350 and I tested with a bridged cap and a discharge resistor. IT turned out the capacitor was not bad, there was resistance in the coil circuit which weakened the RC duty cycle. An interesting note;
At the octal connector for the scan solenoid I decided to reseat the plug. While doing this I noticed a leaf spring a couple of inches long; maybe 3/8 inch wide with extra sharp points on each corner. It looked like it was supposed to be wedged between the main chassis and the scan control module....maybe to insure a good ground or for hum reduction. Anyway I flexed the spring to make sure it was a good connection and reseated the connector...the scan coil circuit started working with the original pulse forming capacitor. I am running this thing in short selection and play cycles until I am comfortable with the mechanics; amp disabled for reduced load and heat. A new problem has surfaced. After a few cycles of select, scan, play, select, scan, play, and return to parade rest something loses connection in the select function. The scan relay doesn't energize, the selection coils don't get pulsed, and nothing happens. The arrow switches, and the selection buttons cease to function. I have never seen a "select" light on; maybe a bad bulb. But if I move through the arrow selects and slowly move through the select buttons....when I get to 18 the scan solenoid energizes, and a successful select, scan, play will complete. This has happened a couple of times and now I need a schematic...I have the parts and instruction manuals for operations and representative block diagrams. I am staging for making selection switch continuity checks; as soon as I can acquire a point to point schematic.
One other thing.....I am concerned about the TTM running too hot to touch; I noticed that when I rewired the phono arm and replaced grommets......it has plenty of oil and both platter and motor spin freely by hand. I don't recall ever seeing a phonograph motor run this hot!